The structural complexity of old field vegetation and the recruitment of bird-dispersed plant species
- 31 December 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 56 (1) , 109-116
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00378225
Abstract
The input of bird-disseminated seeds into four old fields of different structural complexity was examined. Seed input was greatest along the edges of fields. Significantly more seeds were found in a 13 year old field that had structurally complex vegetation, than in a 3-year-old field with a single layer of vegetation. The lower input into the latter field was a function of both low fruit availability and low structural complexity of the field. Similarly, more seeds were found in a 2-year-old field which had artificial structures, simulating saplings, placed in it than in an adjacent control field of the same age. The shape of the structures was not a significant factor in the input of seeds. Timing of seed deposition was correlated with fruit ripening times, relative nutritional value of the fruit and the movements of frugivorous birds. The input of bird-disseminated seeds into fields appears to be directly related to the structural complexity of the vegetation. Woody plants increase the structural complexity of the old fields and serve as recruitment foci for bird-disseminated seeds. Thus, seed deposition by birds influences vegetation pattern, and conversely, the presence of recruitment foci in the vegetation may influence bird dispersal patterns of bird-disseminated seeds.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Frugivorous Bats, Seed Shadows, and the Structure of Tropical ForestsBiotropica, 1981
- Dispersal of Acacia cyclops by birdsOecologia, 1981
- Invasion by Pittosporum undulatum of the Forests of Central Victoria. I. Invasion Patterns and Plant MorphologyAustralian Journal of Botany, 1981
- Bird Activity and Seed Dispersal of a Tropical Wet Forest TreeEcology, 1977
- Plant Species Diversity in Old‐Field Successional Ecosystems in Southern IllinoisEcology, 1975
- Dynamics of Black Cherry (Prunus serotina Erhr.) in Southern Wisconsin Oak ForestsEcological Monographs, 1971
- Invasion of Trees in Secondary Succession on the New Jersey PiedmontBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1971
- Succession on Abandoned Fields in the Shawnee Hills, Southern IllinoisEcology, 1968
- Ecological Succession on Abandoned Farm Lands and Its Relationship to Wildlife ManagementEcological Monographs, 1954
- Secondary Succession on the Piedmont of New JerseyEcological Monographs, 1952